Greece Probes Extremist Link to Neo-Nazi Murders

ATHENS — Greek authorities believe an extremist group may be behind a drive-by shooting outside the offices of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party in which two men were killed and another wounded, sources close to the investigation said Saturday.

Investigators are examining "all avenues, particularly those that link these events to extremist groups" behind a series of attacks on politicians, police, banks and the media, according to one source.

Attacks by groups describing themselves as revolutionary and anti-authoritarian are relatively common in Greece.

They are not usually fatal, although in 2009 a police officer was killed by three unknown gunmen in Athens and in 2010 a journalist was shot dead at his home. Both killings were claimed by the Sect of Revolutionaries, an extremist group.

Media reports said the weapon used in Friday's attack by two unknown assailants who parked their motorbike close to an Athens office of Golden Dawn was the same type of gun used in the 2009 shooting of a police officer.

The Sect of Revolutionaries has been quiet of late, but another extremist group called the Conspiracy of Fire Nuclei has claimed responsibility for a series of recent attacks including a bomb attack on the car of the Athens prison director.

The two men killed on Friday were aged 22 and 25. Their identities have not been made public but a spokesman for Golden Dawn said they were members.

A 29-year-old man on Saturday remained in hospital in a serious condition after the attack.

The party had planned a meeting for Friday night in the Athens suburb of Neo Iraklio, where the shooting took place.

The attack happened about a month and a half after the killing of an anti-fascist musician by a self-confessed neo-Nazi.

The Sept. 18 murder of hip hop artist Pavlos Fyssas by a Golden Dawn supporter had triggered public outrage, putting pressure on Greek authorities, who launched a crackdown on the party.

Greece's public order minister Nikos Dendias on Friday expressed his "sadness at the death of the young men."

"We will not allow our country to become a place to settle scores," added Dendias.

Formerly on the fringe of Greek politics, the group boosted its popularity by tapping into widespread anger over immigration and austerity reforms in debt-wracked Greece, which is slogging through its sixth year of recession and where youth unemployment stands at 60 percent.

Greek authorities believe an extremist group may be behind a drive-by shooting outside the offices of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party in which two men were killed and another wounded, sources close to the investigation said Saturday.